Outsourcing
involves the transfer of the management and/or day-to-day execution of an entire
business function to an external service provider. The client organization and
the supplier enter into a contractual agreement that defines the transferred
services. Under the agreement the supplier acquires the means of production in
the form of a transfer of people, assets and other resources from the client.
The client agrees to procure the services from the supplier for the term of the
contract. Business segments typically outsourced include information technology,
human resources, facilities and real estate management, and accounting. Many
companies also outsource customer support and call center functions like
telemarketing, customer services, market research, manufacturing and
engineering.
Outsourcing
and offshoring are used interchangeably in public discourse despite important
technical differences. Outsourcing involves contracting with a supplier, which
may or may not involve some degree of offshoring. Offshoring is the transfer of
an organizational function to another country, regardless of whether the work is
outsourced or stays within the same corporation.
REASONS
OF OUTSOURCING
Organizations
that outsource are seeking to realize benefits or address the following
issues:
Cost
Savings. The
lowering of the overall cost of the service to the business. This will involve
reducing the scope, defining quality levels, re-pricing, re-negotiation, cost
re-structuring. Access to lower cost economies through offshoring called "labor
arbitrage" generated by the wage gap between industrialized and developing
nations.
Cost
Restructuring.
Operating leverage is a measure that compares fixed costs to variable costs.
Outsourcing changes the balance of this ratio by offering a move from fixed to
variable cost and also by making variable costs more
predictable.
Improve
Quality.
Achieve a step change in quality through contracting out the service with a new
Service Level Agreement.
Knowledge.
Access to intellectual property and wider experience and
knowledge.
Contract.
Services will be provided to a legally binding contract with financial penalties
and legal redress. This is not the case with internal
services.
Operational
Expertise.
Access to operational best practice that would be too difficult or time
consuming to develop in-house.
Staffing
Issues.
Access to a larger talent pool and a sustainable source of skills.
Capacity
Management. An
improved method of capacity management of services and technology where the risk
in providing the excess capacity is borne by the supplier.
Catalyst
For Change. An
organization can use an outsourcing agreement as a catalyst for major step
change that can not be achieved alone. The outsourcer becomes a Change agent in
the process.
Reduce
Time To Market. The
acceleration of the development or production of a product through the
additional capability brought by the supplier.
Commodification. The
trend of standardizing business processes, IT Services and application services
enabling businesses to intelligently buy at the right price. Allows a wide range
of businesses access to services previously only available to large
corporations.
Risk
Management. An
approach to risk management for some types of risks is to partner with an
outsourcer who is better able to provide the mitigation.
Time
Zone.
A sequential task can be done during normal day shift in different time zones -
to make it seamlessly available 24x7. Same/similar can be done on a longer term
between earth's hemispheres of summer/winter.